반복영역 건너뛰기
지역메뉴 바로가기
주메뉴 바로가기
본문 바로가기

연구정보

Subducted, detached, and torn slabs beneath the Greater Caucasus

아제르바이잔 국외연구자료 기타 Tea Mumladze, Adam M. Forte, Eric S. Cowgill, Charles C. Trexler, Nathan A. Niemi, M. Burak Yıkılmaz, Louise H. Kellogg GeoResJ 발간일 : 2014-09-11 등록일 : 2016-05-04 원문링크

The Greater Caucasus Mountains contain the highest peaks in Europe and define, for over 850 km along strike, the leading edge of the second-largest active collisional orogen on Earth. However, the mechanisms by which this range is being constructed remain disputed. Using a new database of earthquake records from local networks in Georgia, Russia, and Azerbaijan, together with previously published hypocenter locations, we show that the central and eastern Greater Caucasus Mountains are underlain by a northeast-dipping zone of mantle seismicity that we interpret as a subducted slab. Beneath the central Greater Caucasus (east of 45°E), the zone of seismicity extends to a depth of at least 158 km with a dip of 40°NE and a slab length of 130280 km. In contrast, beneath the western GC (west of 45°E) there is a pronounced lack of events below 50 km, which we infer to reflect slab breakoff and detachment. We also observe a gap in intermediate-depth seismicity (4575 km) at the western end of the subducted slab beneath the central Greater Caucasus, which we interpret as an eastward-propagating tear. This tear coincides with a region of minimum horizontal convergence rates between the Lesser and Greater Caucasus, as expected in a region of active slab breakoff. Active subduction beneath the eastern Greater Caucasus presents a potentially larger seismic hazard than previously recognized and may explain historical records of large magnitude (M 8) seismicity in this region.

본 페이지에 등재된 자료는 운영기관(KIEP)EMERiCs의 공식적인 입장을 대변하고 있지 않습니다.

목록